I | INTRODUCTION |
Uruguay
(country) country on the southeastern coast of South America between
Brazil and Argentina. It is the second smallest country in South America, after
Suriname. The capital and chief economic center of Uruguay is the coastal city
of Montevideo (pronounced mahn teh vih DAY oh).
Uruguay was a part of the colonial empire of
Spain in the Americas until the early 1800s. After a brief period of Portuguese
rule, Uruguay became an independent nation in 1828. Its Spanish past influences
many aspects of Uruguayan culture. Spanish is the official language of Uruguay.
The country’s formal name in Spanish is República Oriental del
Uruguay.
A small country about the size of the state of
Oklahoma, Uruguay is heavily urbanized. More than 90 percent of all Uruguayans
live in urban areas, and more than 40 percent live in the capital city. Most of
Uruguay’s people are of European descent.
Tourism plays a major role in Uruguay’s
economy. The country’s picturesque beaches attract visitors from all over the
world. Agriculture also is an important economic activity, especially the
raising of livestock.
II | LAND AND RESOURCES |
Uruguay’s land is a transition zone between
the Pampas plains of Argentina and the hilly uplands of Brazil. The terrain
varies from grassy, rolling plains in the south to low plateaus and hills to the
north and east. The Cuchilla Grande region in the east is the most rugged part
of Uruguay, containing the country’s highest point, Cerro Catedral. Wide sandy
beaches, sand dunes, and shallow lagoons fringe the Atlantic coastline.
The Uruguay River, which forms the country’s
western border, joins the Paraná River at the Atlantic Ocean, forming an estuary
between Uruguay and its neighbor to the south, Argentina. This giant estuary,
called the Río de la Plata (Spanish for “Silver River”), is 200 km (120 mi) wide
at its mouth. The Paraná-Uruguay drainage system is the largest in South America
after that of the Amazon River. The Río Negro is the principal river of the
country’s interior, although only its lower portion is deep enough for access by
ship.
A | Climate |
Uruguay has a warm, temperate climate.
Located south of the equator, Uruguay experiences its warmest months in January
and February, when the average temperature is about 22°C (72°F). The coldest
month is June, when the temperature averages 10°C (50°F). The country gets about
890 mm (35 in) of rainfall annually. During the winter months, cold storms known
as pamperos blow from the southwest, but frost and snow are virtually
unknown in most parts of Uruguay.
B | Natural Resources |
Uruguay’s principal resources are
agricultural; minerals are scarce, and there are no known petroleum reserves.
Except for the sandy, marshy areas along the eastern coast, the country’s soil
is generally very fertile and good for farming.
Hydroelectricity from the nation’s rivers
is responsible for about 75 percent of Uruguay’s energy production. The
principal hydroelectric power plant is Salto Grande on the Uruguay River. Two
other plants are in operation on the Río Negro, and another, on the Brazilian
border, was constructed during the 1980s. The electric power industry is under
the control of the government. The country also imports natural gas from
neighboring Argentina via a pipeline completed in the late 1990s.
C | Plants and Animals |
The predominant vegetation in Uruguay is
tall prairie grass. The bluish-tinted prairies provide an extremely rich natural
pasture. The nation has a smaller forest area than any other South American
country.
Flowering plants in Uruguay include myrtle,
mimosa, rosemary, and scarlet-flowered ceiba. Indigenous hardwood trees include
urunday, lapacho, carob, quebracho, jacaranda, willow, and acacia. Palms
flourish in the southeast and in the valleys. In the coastal area, pine and
eucalyptus trees have been planted to prevent erosion. Poplar, cypress, oak,
cedar, mulberry, and magnolia trees are also found around the country.
Common mammals found in Uruguay include
otter, wild hog, fox, wildcat, armadillo, anteater, and various rodents. Such
mammals as the puma, rhea (American ostrich), tapir, and seal were relatively
abundant when the Spanish first visited Uruguay in the 16th century. Today they
are scarce.
Waterfowl include the swan, stork, crane,
white heron, and duck. Other birds are the vulture, burrowing owl, partridge,
quail, wild turkey, parakeet, lapwing, cardinal, and hummingbird. The principal
reptiles are lizards, tortoises, rattlesnakes, and a viper called the víbora
de la cruz. Caimans thrive in the upper waters of the Uruguay River. There
are many species of large spiders.
III | PEOPLE |
The people of Uruguay are almost entirely of
European descent, mostly Spanish and Italian. Few indigenous people still live
in Uruguay—most native tribes died out by the 19th century. Only about 5 to 10
percent of the population is mestizo (mixed native and white), black, or
mulatto (mixed black and white).
Uruguay’s population is 3,477,778 (2008
estimate). The average population density is 20 persons per sq km (52 per sq
mi). The population is concentrated near the Atlantic coast, and only 7 percent
of the population is rural. Migration from farms to cities and the resulting
crowded urban conditions have been serious social and economic problems.
A | Principal Cities |
The principal cities of Uruguay are
Montevideo (population, 2005 estimate, 1,347,888), the country’s capital, chief
port, and economic center; Salto (99,072), a center of commerce, shipping, and
the meat-salting and meat-packing industries; and Paysandú (115,222), a port and
center of the meat-packing and frozen-meat industries.
B | Religion and Language |
Freedom of religion is guaranteed by the
constitution of Uruguay. Three-quarters of the people belong to the Roman
Catholic Church. There are also sizable Protestant and Jewish congregations. The
official language is Spanish, which in Uruguay has been influenced by Italian
vocabulary and pronunciation.
C | Education |
Uruguay has one of the highest rates of
literacy in Latin America, at 98.2 percent of the adult population. Six years of
primary education is compulsory, and Uruguay is one of the few nations in the
Western Hemisphere in which all education, including college and postgraduate
work, is free. However, many students from poor families must leave school to go
to work. The largest college in Uruguay is the University of the Republic,
founded in Montevideo in 1849.
D | Culture and Art |
Western European tradition is widespread
in Uruguay. Since the 19th century the country has adopted the cultural
institutions of the European immigrants who settled there. As in Argentina,
which has folk music and dances similar to those of Uruguay, the gaucho
(South American cowboy) has been a common subject of folklore and music.
D1 | Literature |
Uruguay’s first noteworthy writer was
18th-century poet Bartolomé Hidalgo. Although not a gaucho himself, he used
gaucho themes. He was one of the first poets to introduce the colorful language
of rural folk into poetry. Juan Zorrilla de San Martín wrote Tabaré
(1886; translated 1956), considered one of the genuine epic poems of America.
Tabaré describes the clash between Spanish settlers and indigenous people
in Uruguay that ended in the destruction of the indigenous culture.
Important writers of the 20th century
were essayist José Enrique Rodó; novelists and short-story writers Juan Carlos
Onetti, Carlos Martínez Moreno, and Mario Benedetti; and poet Julio Herrera y
Reissig. Other significant Uruguayan authors of the century include Carlos
Reyles, a writer of realistic psychological novels; Horacio Quiroga, one of
Latin America’s finest short-story writers; Julio Herrera y Reissig, a complex
symbolist poet; and Alberto Zum Felde, a historian and literary critic. Uruguay
has also produced many talented women writers, including Delmira Agustini, Juana
de Ibarbourou, Sara Bollo, Éster de Cáceres, Sara de Ibáñez, and Orfila
Bardesio. Florencio Sánchez, Latin America's best-known dramatist, wrote
realistic plays of national problems at the end of the 19th century and
beginning of the 20th century. See Latin American Literature.
D2 | Painting |
Juan Manuel Blanes was Uruguay's
foremost painter of the 19th century. The Municipal Museum of Fine Arts in
Montevideo now bears his name. Three important artists of the 20th century were
Rafael Barradas, an abstract painter; Pedro Figari, a painter of colorful
19th-century scenes in the postimpressionist style; and Joaquín Torres-García,
who founded the Torres-García workshop, which influenced a generation of
Uruguayan painters.
D3 | Music |
Uruguayan folk and popular music
reflect the mood of the people and of the land. Songs include the melancholy
“Vidala” and “Triste,” and the dreamy and plaintive “Estilo,” a song of the
plains. One of the foremost musicologists of Latin America is Francisco Curt
Lange, who has collected and published hundreds of the region's folk songs.
Among important Uruguayan composers of the 20th century were Eduardo Fabini,
whose works are based mainly on native themes; Cluzeau Mortet; Vincente Ascone;
and Héctor Tosar.
E | Cultural Institutions |
All the major libraries in Uruguay are in
Montevideo. They include the National Library; the Library of the National
Historical Museum, known for its collection of engravings, maps, coins, and
native Uruguayan material; the National Congress Library; and the library of the
National Archives.
The principal museums include the
National Historical Museum, the National Museum of Fine Arts, and the Museum of
Natural History, all in Montevideo. The Museo del Indo y del Gaucho, in
Tacuarembó, has collections of Native American and gaucho art, weapons, and
implements.
F | Sports and Holidays |
The national game of Uruguay is soccer
(known as fútbol in Spanish). The country's national teams have won many
international competitions, including two titles in the prestigious World Cup:
the first World Cup, which Uruguay hosted in 1930, and another in 1950.
Important soccer games are played in the large Centenary Stadium in
Montevideo.
Other popular sports in Uruguay are
polo—introduced by the British—tennis, boxing, golf, water sports of all kinds,
and automobile and boat racing. Because of the mild climate, outdoor sports are
popular year-round.
An annual festival known as Carnival
Week, typically held in February, draws huge crowds to Montevideo for parades,
masquerades, music, and dancing. This festival's biggest celebrations take place
on the Monday and Tuesday before Ash Wednesday. Another important holiday, La
Semana Criolla, is observed during the week before Easter and features
rodeos and other traditional activities. Uruguay's Independence Day is
celebrated on August 25.
IV | ECONOMY |
Although Uruguay is not highly
industrialized, it is not considered underdeveloped. Population growth in
Uruguay is much slower than in most underdeveloped countries and the population
exerts only minor pressure on the natural resources that drive the nation’s
economy. Income per person is low compared with the United States or Western
European countries, but it is one of the highest in Latin America.
Uruguay has a large middle class that
developed during the 20th century. A primary factor in this transformation was
the large number of white-collar jobs generated by the government. These jobs
afforded many people slow but steady upward social mobility, but they also
created a considerable income gap between the urban and rural populations.
Agriculture, specifically raising animals
such as sheep and cattle, is still of primary importance to the economy,
although manufacturing is growing in significance. Most businesses are privately
owned, but the government operates the state railways, electrical power and
telephones, and the official broadcasting service. In 2006 budget figures showed
$5.4 billion in revenue and $5.3 billion in expenditures.
A | Agriculture |
Livestock raising is the principal
agricultural activity of Uruguay and a mainstay of the economy. Meat, wool, and
hides make up more than one-third of the country’s annual exports. The moderate
climate and even seasonal distribution of rainfall allow animals to graze
throughout the year.
Only 8 percent of the land is devoted to
crops, although the area under cultivation is increasing. The most important
crops are cereal grains, including wheat, corn, rice, oats, barley, and rye.
Crops used to produce oils, such as sunflower seeds, linseed (flaxseed), and
peanuts, make up the second most important group of crops. Other profitable
products are sugarcane, sugar beets, and citrus fruits.
B | Forestry and Fishing |
Uruguay is not densely forested; most of
the wood harvested is used for fuel. The government has developed the fishing
industry and the annual catch has grown dramatically since the 1970s. Hake,
croaker, weakfish, and squid are among the most important species caught.
C | Manufacturing and Mining |
Industrial production grew rapidly in
Uruguay in the late 1970s as the government encouraged the development of
export-oriented manufacturing industries, but this activity has declined since
the 1980s. The leading industries are textile manufacturing and the processing
of food, primarily meat. Oil refining, cement manufacturing, and the production
of clothing, steel, aluminum, electrical equipment, and chemicals are also
important industries in the country.
Mineral production in Uruguay is
comparatively unimportant to the economy. The principal mining activity is the
quarrying of sand and clay. There is also some gold mining.
D | Currency, Banking, and Trade |
The legal currency of Uruguay is the
peso uruguayo, consisting of 100 centésimos (24.10 pesos uruguayos
equal U.S.$1; 2006 average). In 1993 the peso uruguayo replaced Uruguay’s former
currency, the nuevo peso, at the rate of 1 peso uruguayo per 1,000 nuevo
pesos. Uruguay has a well-developed banking system, with many private banks. The
Bank of the Republic, founded in 1896, is a state bank and the financial agent
of the government. The Central Bank of Uruguay controls private banking.
Foreign trade plays an important role in
the economy of Uruguay. In 2004 exports were valued at $2.9 billion and imports
at $3.1 billion. The country’s main trading partners are Argentina, Brazil, and
the United States. Textiles, meats, fish, rice, and hides are the most important
exports. Imports include raw materials for manufacturing, fuel and lubricants,
food products, plastics, chemicals, prescription medicines, construction
materials, machinery, and cars and trucks.
Uruguay is a founding member of several
trade groups, including the Latin American Integration Association (LAIA) and
the Southern Cone Common Market (known by its Spanish acronym, Mercosur). The
LAIA, which encompasses all of the countries in South America except Suriname,
Guyana, and French Guiana, works toward increasing regional integration and
trade. Mercosur, which also includes Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay and is
headquartered in Montevideo, focuses on establishing duty-free trade between
members.
E | Tourism |
Tourism is an increasingly important part
of the economy of Uruguay. Visitors come from all over the world, but especially
from neighboring Argentina. Uruguay features many luxurious beach resorts, such
as the famous Punta del Este.
V | GOVERNMENT |
Uruguay had several constitutions during the
course of the 20th century. The country alternated between a presidential form
of government and a system under which executive power was held by a nine-member
national council. Uruguay's most recent constitution, adopted by popular
referendum in 1966, provides for a republican form of government with a
popularly elected president and legislature (Congreso, or National
Congress). All citizens at least 18 years old are required by law to vote.
In 1973 the National Congress was dissolved
after a military takeover. The government was ruled by a national security
council composed primarily of high-ranking military officers. All local
governments were dissolved and replaced with officials appointed by the central
government. This system lasted until general elections were held in 1984, paving
the way for a return to civilian rule the following year.
A | Executive |
The electoral system restored in 1984
provides for a president and vice president chosen by universal suffrage for a
five-year term. The president appoints a Council of Ministers to head the
various government departments.
B | Legislature |
The National Congress, Uruguay’s
legislature, consists of a Chamber of Deputies, which has 99 members, and a
Senate, with 30 members. Elected by popular vote, members of the legislature
serve a five-year term. The country's vice president serves as president of the
Senate.
C | Political Parties |
For much of its history, Uruguay
essentially had a two-party system, dominated by the National (Blanco) Party and
the Colorado Party. Both of these parties were formed in the 1830s by military
leaders, the Blanco Party by General Manuel Oribe and the Colorado Party by
General José Fructuoso Rivera. Blanco is Spanish for 'white'; colorado
for 'colored red”—names that originated from the traditional colors of the
hatbands worn by supporters.
During most of the 19th century the two
parties were little more than the personal followings of their founders and of
their successors. As European immigrants brought more radical ideas to Uruguay,
the Colorado Party became associated with the more liberal urban population
while the Blanco Party typified the conservative and traditionalist elements of
the rural population.
By the 1930s there were few significant
differences between the two parties, however. Both Colorados and Blancos had
divided into several factions, and the political divisions among these factions
were far more important than any division between the parties themselves. By the
1990s both the Colorados and the Blancos were considered politically
conservative.
The Communist Party became legal in Uruguay
in 1985. A leftist coalition, known as the Broad Front (or Progressive
Encounter), grew in popularity in the 1990s. The Broad Front included the
Communist and Socialist parties and replaced the Colorados as the party of the
left. In 1999 the Broad Front won the most seats of any party in the National
Congress. In 2004 the party captured the presidency, signaling the end of the
180-year dominance of the two original parties.
D | Local Government |
Uruguay is divided into 19 administrative
departments. Each department has an administrator appointed by the central
government.
E | Judiciary |
In 1977 the judiciary was placed under the
direct control of the central government. The highest court, the Court of
Justice, has five members, appointed by the executive to serve ten-year terms.
The administrative courts hear cases involving the functioning of state
administration. Lower courts handle legal matters in the departmental capitals
and other large towns.
F | Health and Welfare |
Uruguay is noted for its advanced
social-welfare programs; coverage includes accidents, occupational illnesses,
sickness, old age, maternity, and child welfare. A special fund issues grants to
families; and laws have been passed to protect women and minors in employment.
The ministry of public health has established numerous health centers and
clinics, lowered the incidence of tuberculosis, and lowered the infant mortality
rate.
G | Defense |
In 2004 Uruguay had an active volunteer
army of 15,200 soldiers. The navy and air force were small, having forces of
5,700 and 3,100, respectively. Military service is not compulsory.
VI | HISTORY |
The Charrúa, a warlike and seminomadic
indigenous people, originally occupied the land on the eastern side of the
Uruguay and La Plata rivers. Spanish explorer Juan Díaz de Solís was the first
European to arrive in the territory now included in Uruguay. In 1516 his landing
party sailed into Río de la Plata. That same year, the Charrúa killed Solis’s
party on the riverbanks. Subsequent attempts to colonize the territory during
the 16th century were also discouraged by the Charrúa. The first permanent
settlement was made in 1624 by the Spanish on the Río Negro at Soriano.
A | International Rivalry During the Colonial Period |
Between 1680 and 1683, contesting Spanish
ownership of the region, Portuguese colonists in Brazil established several
settlements, such as the Novo Colonia del Sacramento, along the Río de la Plata
opposite Buenos Aires. However, the Spanish made no attempt to dislodge the
Portuguese until 1723, when the latter began fortifying the heights around the
Bay of Montevideo. A Spanish expedition from Buenos Aires forced the Portuguese
to abandon the site, and there the Spanish founded the city of Montevideo in
1726. Spanish-Portuguese rivalry continued in the 18th century, ending in 1777
with the establishment of Spanish rule in the territory under the jurisdiction
of the viceroyalty of La Plata.
A crisis occurred in the colony after
French emperor Napoleon imprisoned Spanish king Ferdinand VII and invaded Spain
in 1808. After French troops captured the last royalist stronghold in Spain in
1810, a group of leading citizens in Buenos Aires rejected the authority of the
viceroy and established a caretaker government to rule over the colony in the
name of King Ferdinand. In reality, many of the leaders of the new government
were determined to make the colony independent of Spanish rule. Buenos Aires was
unable to establish its influence over several outlying areas, including
Uruguay, where the Spanish viceroy had moved his court. In 1810 and 1811,
Uruguayan revolutionaries, led by General José Gervasio Artigas, joined in the
revolt against Spain. The Spanish governor was driven from Montevideo in 1814.
In 1816 the Portuguese in
Brazil—perceiving that the newly emancipated territory, known as the Banda
Oriental del Uruguay (Eastern Shore of Uruguay), was weak
after its struggle with Spain—invaded the territory, ostensibly to restore
order. The Portuguese conquest was completed in 1821, when the Banda Oriental
was annexed to Brazil. However, the so-called Immortal 33, a group of
revolutionaries led by Juan Antonio Lavalleja, began fighting the Brazilians and
driving them from the countryside. In 1825 representatives from the Banda
Oriental’s provincial legislature declared the territory’s independence.
Argentina intervened on Uruguay's behalf, and war broke out between Brazil and
Argentina. British mediation brought about a peace treaty, by which both Brazil
and Argentina guaranteed Uruguay's independence. As a result, the República
Oriental del Uruguay was established in 1828; its first constitution was adopted
in 1830.
However, Uruguay has never been entirely
free of the influence of its neighbors. During much of the 19th century, the
warring factional leaders (caudillos) appealed to either Argentina or
Brazil for help against each other, and civil war was frequent until 1872. The
followers of José Fructuoso Rivera, the country's first president (1830-1835 and
1839-1845), appealed to Brazil for support. The followers of Manuel Oribe, the
country's second president (1835-1838), turned to Argentina. Uruguay's
traditional political parties, the Blancos and the Colorados, emerged from these
two factions.
B | Independence and Civil War |
The República Oriental del Uruguay was
organized in 1830, but it was soon divided into hostile factions as a result of
rivalry between the Blancos and the Colorados. Civil war broke out in 1836.
During the conflict, the Blancos, aided by Argentine forces, besieged
Montevideo, which was held by the Colorados from 1843 until 1852. The Colorados,
aided by Brazil and anti-Argentine forces, defeated Oribe and the Blancos in
1852. Rivera and the Colorados thereupon took power. The two factions renewed
conflict in 1855 and continued it intermittently, with the Colorados retaining
control almost continuously after 1865.
Between 1865 and 1870 Uruguay was allied
with Brazil and Argentina in a war against Paraguay. In the War of the Triple
Alliance (1865-1870), Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay fought Paraguay's attempts
to establish its influence in Uruguay. Although the allies won the war, both
sides suffered heavy losses. Bitter fighting continued between the Blancos and
the Colorados until 1872, when they agreed to divide the country into spheres of
influence as a first step toward peaceful coexistence. Foreign interventions
tapered off after the War of the Triple Alliance, and the improved political
conditions, which developed as the result of the agreement between the parties,
led to social and economic progress. The last decades of the 19th century were
years of relative peace.
The era of peace was interrupted by the
murder of President Juan Idiarte Borda of the Colorado Party in 1897. After
Idiarte's assassination, the Blancos and the Colorados concluded another
territorial agreement. This agreement preserved Blanco strength within only a
limited area. European immigration increased after 1880 as settlers were
attracted by the prospects of peace and fertile soil. Most of these immigrants
adopted Colorado ideas. The election of José Batlle y Ordóñez to the presidency
in 1903 caused the Blancos to fear the agreement would be discarded because the
Colorado Party now held a large majority of votes. Another civil war broke out,
and it ended with the defeat of the Blancos. The interparty agreement was ended
by the new government. The Blancos were granted amnesty, however.
C | Early-20th-Century Domestic and Foreign Issues |
In the early 20th century, membership in
the two rival political groups ceased to be merely a matter of traditional
loyalties. The Blancos became the conservative party, attracting chiefly the
rural population and the clergy, and the Colorados became known as progressive
and proponents of advanced social legislation. During the second presidential
term of José Batlle y Ordóñez, between 1911 and 1915, social legislation was
enacted, and Uruguay soon became known as the most progressive nation in South
America.
Batlle's moderately socialist program
included the establishment of many government-owned businesses, some of which
were monopolies. His program also promoted retirement and medical-aid programs;
free education; extensive labor legislation; and public health measures. Much of
this program was put into effect by Batlle's successors. Batlle never succeeded
in establishing a policy of agrarian reform because rural landowners had
sufficient power in the legislature to block such reforms.
In 1917, during World War I, Uruguay broke
off relations with Germany and leased German ships, seized in the harbor of
Montevideo, to the United States. In that year a new constitution, dividing the
executive authority between the president and the national administrative
council and providing for the separation of church and state, was promulgated.
Uruguay joined the League of Nations in 1920.
In 1933 President Gabriel Terra, who had
taken office in 1931, demanded that the Uruguayan constitution be amended to
allow the president wider powers. His demands brought threats of revolution, and
he thereupon established a dictatorship with the cooperation of Luis Alberto de
Herrera, the Blanco Party leader. The two men ruled together in a mild
dictatorship in which all government positions and spoils were divided among
their followers. A new constitution adopted in 1934 made this agreement law and
curtailed individual liberties.
General Alfredo Baldomir, the leading
Colorado, began the restoration of democratic government. He was elected
president in 1938. A new constitution adopted in 1942 provided for a single
president, no special status for either party, and the full restoration of
liberties. During World War II (1939-1945), Uruguay severed diplomatic,
financial, and economic relations with the Axis powers. In 1945 the country
joined the United Nations (UN).
D | Postwar Decade |
Tomás Berreta, candidate of the Colorado
Party and former public works minister, was elected president in 1946, but he
died a few months after taking office. Vice President Luis Batlle Berres
completed the remainder of Berreta’s term. During this time, government policy
became more conservative and government efforts centered on consolidation of the
social changes introduced originally by Batlle and his successors. The
presidential and general assembly elections of 1950 brought Andrés Martínez
Trueba of the Colorado Party to power. In 1952 a Trueba-sponsored constitutional
amendment, approved the year before, abolished the presidency and transferred
executive power to a nine-member national council of government.
In retaliation against the Uruguayan
policy of granting asylum to Argentine political refugees, Argentine dictator
Juan Perón imposed travel and trade restrictions on Uruguay. The government, in
protest, severed diplomatic relations with Argentina in 1953.
Meanwhile, declining wool prices and
curtailed meat exports had led to increasing unemployment and inflation. To ease
the economic situation, Uruguay entered into trade agreements during 1956 with
the People’s Republic of China and other Communist countries. The economy
continued to deteriorate, however.
In 1958, after 93 years of Colorado
government, an overwhelming majority elected the Blancos to power, partly as a
reaction to the prolonged economic recession. The new government initiated
economic reforms; it was faced, however, with leftist agitation and consequent
labor unrest, and it charged that Uruguay was being made a base of international
communism.
E | Political Deterioration |
The Blancos continued in power until 1966.
In that year they and the Colorados supported a measure for a return to the
presidential system, and the measure was approved by referendum in November. In
general elections held at the same time, the Colorados won, and Oscar Daniel
Gestido, a retired air force general, was elected president. After Gestido died,
Vice President Jorge Pacheco Areco succeeded to the presidency.
Trying to halt Uruguay's rampant
inflation, Pacheco immediately instituted wage and price controls. Labor
disputes erupted, and Pacheco declared a state of emergency in June 1968 and
again in June 1969. During these states of emergency, constitutional guarantees
were suspended, student demonstrators were shot, hundreds of suspected
dissidents were imprisoned, and the police began to use torture during
interrogations.
A group of student revolutionaries, the
Tupamaros (a name taken from Tupac Amarú, the last emperor of the Inca people),
responded with an urban guerrilla campaign. They kidnapped and later released a
number of foreign diplomats and businessmen, robbed several banks, freed
political prisoners from the jails, and assassinated a number of police
officials. From June 1968 until March 1969, Uruguay remained under modified
martial law. In June 1969 a fact-finding visit by Nelson Rockefeller, who was
then governor of New York State, was met by violent demonstrations. Pacheco
imposed a modified state of siege.
In the 1971 elections the Colorado
candidate, Juan María Bordaberry, and the Blanco candidate were virtually tied.
In 1972 the Electoral Court proclaimed Bordaberry president and he began a
five-year term. Meanwhile, violence by the Tupamaros had escalated, and
kidnappings and killings became common. In April 1972 Congress declared a state
of internal war and suspended constitutional guarantees; some 35,000 police and
military searched for guerrilla hideouts. The state of war was lifted in July,
but constitutional guarantees were further suspended until 1973. Bordaberry soon
came under pressure both from the Blancos and from dissident factions of his own
party. Labor groups reacted to the government’s stringent economic and social
policies with strikes throughout 1972. Inflation soared, and the currency was
devalued ten times in that year.
F | Military Takeover |
Following the largely successful
suppression of the guerrillas, military leaders became convinced that they
should play a central role in the country’s political affairs. In February 1973
they demanded the creation of a military 'national security council' to control
the administration.
This arrangement led to a conflict with
Congress. Bordaberry dissolved the legislature, replacing it with a 25-member
appointed Council of State dominated by the military. The Communist-led National
Labor Confederation (CNT) responded with a general strike, which was broken by
the government after violent confrontations. The unions lost their independence
and the CNT was banned.
In the following years the military
extended its control to most of the country’s institutions. In 1976 Bordaberry
canceled elections scheduled for that year, but the military deposed him and
named a new national council. Aparicio Méndez, a former minister of public
health, was selected president for a five-year term.
The military regime maintained intense
political repression during its period of control. More than 1 in 1,000
Uruguayans were held as political prisoners and there was widespread torture. In
1980 the regime attempted to legitimize itself by obtaining approval for a new
constitution that would give the armed forces a permanent supervisory role over
the government. That constitution was overwhelmingly rejected in a popular
referendum. In 1981 General Gregorio Alvarez was installed as president for a
term expiring in 1985.
Alvarez restored political rights to some
politicians. However, all the left-wing parties and the most popular leaders of
the traditional parties remained banned. During the next three years popular
opposition to the regime, intensified by an economic downturn, became
increasingly open. This opposition culminated in a demonstration by 400,000
Uruguayans in Montevideo in late 1983 and a general strike in early 1984.
G | Civilian Government |
The armed forces, isolated by the
collapse of military rule in Argentina, finally agreed to hold elections and
restore civilian government. The military stipulated that the opposition parties
had to agree to exclude banned politicians from the elections, and they also had
to promise that the military would be immune from prosecution for abuses against
political dissidents. These crimes included the execution of about 150
Uruguayans by the government between 1973 and 1985, the “disappearance” of least
200 people, and the imprisonment and torture of thousands of others.
Presidential elections were held in late
1984, with the armed forces exercising veto power over the choice of nominees.
The winner was a moderate, Julio María Sanguinetti of the Colorado Party. An
amnesty covering all members of the military accused of human rights violations
from 1973 to 1985 was granted in 1986 and upheld by referendum in 1989.
Controversy over these crimes and the subsequent amnesty continues to influence
the country’s politics.
In 1989 Luis Alberto Lacalle of the
Blancos was elected president. Economic stagnation and rising inflation soon
prompted him to implement an austerity program and to announce plans to
privatize state-run companies. In protest, labor leaders called a series of
general strikes. Former president Julio María Sanguinetti, a candidate for the
Colorado Party, won the 1994 presidential election. In legislative elections the
Broad Front, a leftist coalition that included Communists, Socialists, and
former Tupamaro guerrillas, for the first time able to campaign legally and
openly, made significant inroads against the more traditional Blanco and
Colorado parties.
H | Recent Events |
In November 1999 the Colorado Party’s
Jorge Batlle—whose great-uncle had served as Uruguay's president nearly 100
years earlier—defeated the Broad Front’s Tabaré Vázquez, a Socialist, in the
presidential election. Vázquez, a physician and the popular mayor of Montevideo,
had forced a runoff by winning the first round in October. Batlle was only able
to win after gaining the Blancos’ support. The Broad Front won pluralities in
both houses of the legislature in the October legislative elections.
Batlle’s presidency oversaw one of the
worst economic crises in Uruguay’s history. During his tenure nearly a third of
Uruguayans were at the poverty level and unemployment ranged from 13 to 20
percent. Tens of thousands of young people were forced to emigrate to seek work.
In the presidential elections of October
2004, the coalition led by candidate Tabaré Vázquez captured about 51 percent of
the vote, avoiding a runoff. The election brought the left to power for the
first time in Uruguay’s history. The Blanco Party candidate won more than 30
percent of the vote but the candidate of the Colorado Party won only 10 percent.
The Popular Participation Movement, founded by former Tupamaros, many of whom
had been jailed and tortured or forced into exile during the military
dictatorship, won more votes than any other party in the Broad Front coalition.
The Broad Front coalition also captured both houses of the Congress.
The victory of the left in Uruguay
appeared to confirm a growing trend in Latin America in which voters have chosen
leftists or populists over moderates and conservatives. Since 1998, the left has
won presidential elections in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador,
Nicaragua, and Venezuela. Like the coalition in Uruguay, all have campaigned on
platforms that rejected the free-market policies of the International Monetary
Fund, which have been supported by various United States administrations. See
also Globalization.
Several of the new leftist governments,
such as Argentina and Chile, have also initiated investigations of past human
rights violations carried out under Operation Condor in the 1970s and 1980s.
Operation Condor was a joint effort of several right-wing regimes in the
hemisphere that resulted in the disappearance and torture of tens of thousands
of left-wing activists. With the election of Vázquez, Uruguay also made
prosecution of human rights violations a top priority. In November 2006 a
Uruguayan judge issued arrest warrants for former president Bordaberry and a top
aide in the murders of two legislators and two suspected Tupamaros
guerrillas.
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